The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Spieth's wild finish is the stuff of legend

Comeback spoils Kuchar’s chance at fifirst major title.

- Steve Hummer

Jordan Spieth just won his third diffffffff­fffferent major title four days before his 24th birthday, the kind of accomplish­ment that once again puts him in elite company. He keeps hobnobbing with the swells of the game and pretty soon we’re going to start believing he might actually belong with them.

The British Open part of his program wasn’t always pretty, but it was absolutely compelling. There is no golfer working today who, because of the volatility of his play, is more watchable. No player is more capable of turning a pedestrian game into a thrill ride.

Sunday, Spieth seemed to lose it — his lead, the tournament, his mind, everything — on the 13th hole after taking an unplayable from an overgrown English hillside. He ended up hitting from the equipment trailers and taking a bogey after nearly 30 minutes of adventures in surveying and crowd control. So disturbed was Spieth that he almost aced the next hole, then canned a serpentine 40-foot putt for eagle on No. 15. Then made another long birdie putt on No. 16. Game over.

Until Sunday, only Jack Nicklaus had won three legs of the career Grand Slam before turning 24. For the most part of his young career when comparison became necessary, Spieth had been sharing the same sentence with Tiger Woods. In this case, he just upgraded.

To add a claret jug to his collection, Spieth overcame bogeys on three of his fifirst four holes Sunday at Royal Birkdale. He overcame an uncommon bout of doubtful putting. Overcame the half-hour situation comedy that was the 13th hole. And then, nearly 4,000 miles from Rae’s Creek, he shed the last demon from his 2016 Masters meltdown and got back to the business of authoring history. As human as he was in Augusta then, Spieth was equally mythic over the fifinal holes in Southport, England. That’s a spellbindi­ng combinatio­n.

To win the British, he also had to join the list of those who have kept Matt Kuchar from his fifirst major.

Beginning the day three shots back of Spieth, Kuchar played perfectly composed and controlled golf, the kind that could win the day at a major championsh­ip. At least any major championsh­ip in which Jordan Spieth doesn’t turn the place into a theater of the absurd. Kuchar shot 69, held the lead momentaril­y after Spieth’s tribulatio­ns on 13 and then got swept away when his playing partner flflipped a switch that only the most special players possess.

This really may have been the 39-year-old Kuchar’s best chance at breaking through in a major way. Considerin­g where he is in his career and where he physically was this week, the omens lined up in his favor. As a one-time Yellow Jacket, Kuchar was in his element.

The British Open and the Georgia Tech golfer have had a special relationsh­ip. It has been the major of last resort for many of them. And a life-shaping major for all those Jackets who have won abroad.

It began, as most golf stories do, with Bobby Jones. Before he won two British Opens, Jones had to be suffiffici­ently humbled over there. At the 1921 British Open, at the height of his tempestuou­s stage, Jones became so frustrated with his game 10-plus holes into his third round that he just picked up his ball and went home.

He would get over it. Even golfifing saints require a little polishing. He would return as the composed, devoted amateur, the great symbol of sportsmans­hip at a golden age of sport. A slew of titles followed, including British Open wins in 1926, 1927 and ’30.

Two other Georgia Tech men have claimed their sole major championsh­ips on the British Isles.

First, it was David Duval, at his most inscrutabl­e, all poker-faced behind his wrap-around sunglasses, winning at Royal Lytham & St. Annes in 2001 by three strokes. It was about time for a player who reached the top of the world ranking, having contended and fallen short at a handful of Masters and U.S. Opens.

Eight years later, enter Stewart Cink, whose victory at Turnberry was popular only within the confifines of the greater Duluth area. For it was 59-year-old Tom Watson whom Cink overwhelme­d in a four-hole playoffff, every sentiment on the old fellow’s side.

The 2017 British Open was temptingly close to belonging to another son of Tech. Until he got in the way of the Spieth Show.

A last, best chance for Kuchar? Very possibly. Time is tilting away from him.

For Spieth, there are years more of this kind of ridiculous golf. Years more for him to compile a career to which others will be compared.

 ?? STUART FRANKLIN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Jordan Spieth celebrates his long birdie putt on No. 16 Sunday. He was 5 under par the fifinal fifive holes.
STUART FRANKLIN / GETTY IMAGES Jordan Spieth celebrates his long birdie putt on No. 16 Sunday. He was 5 under par the fifinal fifive holes.
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